Difference between revisions of "Agclimate telecon 2014-04-07"

From Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
Minutes:<br>
 
Minutes:<br>
  
'''Recording of the Telecon Meeting:''' (Starts 30 minutes in) [https://esipfed.webex.com/esipfed/ldr.php?RCID=d95419bb50fcbae6d5ba5df61638f137%20 Jim Fox Presents on Climate Resilience Toolkit]
+
'''Recording of the Telecon Meeting:''' (Starts 30 minutes in) [https://esipfed.webex.com/esipfed/ldr.php?RCID=d95419bb50fcbae6d5ba5df61638f137 Jim Fox Presents on Climate Resilience Toolkit]
 
<br />
 
<br />
  
Line 32: Line 32:
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
<br> Who are the users?
 
<br> Who are the users?
<br>
 
 
*Decision Makers
 
*Decision Makers
 
*Community Level
 
*Community Level
Line 38: Line 37:
 
*Not usually elected officials
 
*Not usually elected officials
 
<br>
 
<br>
<br> What scenarios are highlighted as use cases are specifically Taking Action Stories
+
<br> What scenarios are highlighted as use cases are specifically Taking Action Stories:
<br>
 
 
This is a way to connect to the information. Bringing people directly to case studies to see how they can relate and what could be useful to them. They can filter by problem topic, by examples, by areas of interest. For example:  
 
This is a way to connect to the information. Bringing people directly to case studies to see how they can relate and what could be useful to them. They can filter by problem topic, by examples, by areas of interest. For example:  
 
<br>
 
<br>
Line 47: Line 45:
 
*Case studies show their progress on their action goals
 
*Case studies show their progress on their action goals
 
*Case studies tell their story
 
*Case studies tell their story
 +
<br>
 +
<br> Climate Explorer: Another Way of Interacting (Interactive Map View)
 +
*Spatial and temporal data
 +
*directed by map viewer by topic
 +
*interactive and very easy to interact with
 +
*transparent layers, legends and data sources available to download
 +
*permalink allows users to share with other users they map they create
 +
<br>
 +
<br> Taking Action:
 +
*Tools - and how the tools take action
 +
*Not trying to replicate, trying to point at sources and key aspects - linking to other data sources
 +
*Not every single tool is linked to a use-case, but that is the goal (don't really like having "orphan tools")
 +
*Different teams lead different topics - to add data and tools
 +
*The CRT is a working prototype: to see and include the tools that people are using
 +
*Looking for: user friendly tools with a web base (something like WARF might be "too heavy" for example)
 +
*Focus/Weigh the Tools: Used to build resilience. Used to take action. Look at the near term, cause and effect. Is there a tool to address specific stresses?
 +
*Case Studies: Must have a "Take Action" component
 +
*If people are not sure how to ask the questions they are looking for, CRT also connects them with experts
 +
*Experts - pulls up contact information of people in a geographic area (nearby from the user)
 +
*Looking to build local trust and provide good lines to good information, connect with a trusted source
 +
*Thinking about Crowdsourcing Information. CRT isn't built to do so now, but is considering that direction.
 +
*Anyone can link into the CRT, as the CRT isn't serving the data, which can make action applicable on a local scale
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
Discussion
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
When does scaleability become an issue? How does the CRT decide between case studies? How does it manage them? Archive them? Who are the contributors and what is teh process for determining what is useful, and also what the user may have overlooked?
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
Good question - has not really been determined quite yet. Still getting started. ESIP groups are trusted sources and could be really helpful in finding that knowledge that is out there? Also CRT is continuing to work with the end user (and with the end user in mind), rapid prototyping and learning by doing. CRT is interested in moving people from simple exposure to go on to action, in connecting the dots. Figuring out what people are concerned about and develop the tools that are driven by the values of the end user.
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
CRT is not about reinventing the wheel, it utilizes the top 10-15 tools and portals that people are using globally and is integrating them. There are references to these tools and portals as well, for more information/use. CRT has templates for use-cases (which could be useful for AgClim/ESIP), as well as the networking and the benefit of an "easy to understand story".
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
How are the Use Cases "nominated" and How many people are on the CRT Team?
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
CRT was started a year ago, initial launch in November. Small team with people dedicated to specific subject matters and topics. Case studies are nominated in conversation with the people. CRT asks to make sure these are case studies that are good to be used on the website. It's a conversation, and to see if it is really helping the end user.
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
Summer Meeting Session:
 +
<br>
 +
Continue to discuss this type of conversation/collaboration? Maybe something with other ESIP groups (like the Energy group).
 +
  
 +
<br>
  
  

Latest revision as of 20:31, April 12, 2015

Back to Ag & Climate Workspace

Agenda


Minutes:

Recording of the Telecon Meeting: (Starts 30 minutes in) Jim Fox Presents on Climate Resilience Toolkit

Jim Fox presented on the Climate Resilience Toolkit
The Design of the Climate Resilience Toolkit (CRT) website follows the agenda of the CRT: getting useful data in a form people can easily use

Goals:

  • Moving from data acquisition to action
  • Provide things that will help with risk and uncertainty
  • Help to look at things from a value perspective
  • Provide decision making building blocks - need to relate the data to what people care about



Workflow to answer three basic questions:

  • Did you know?
  • Why should I care?
  • What can we do about it?


There are other ways to dive into the data (examples - Topic Based & Use Cases) which get at a lot of problems which result in the lack of widespread adoption of Earth Science data.

  • Data in easy, usable formats
  • Trust
  • Traceability



Who are the users?

  • Decision Makers
  • Community Level
  • Staff and county managers - the planners who are accountable to elected officials
  • Not usually elected officials



What scenarios are highlighted as use cases are specifically Taking Action Stories: This is a way to connect to the information. Bringing people directly to case studies to see how they can relate and what could be useful to them. They can filter by problem topic, by examples, by areas of interest. For example:

People in the Agriculture Sector:

  • What tools they are using
  • What data they are accessing
  • Case studies show their progress on their action goals
  • Case studies tell their story



Climate Explorer: Another Way of Interacting (Interactive Map View)

  • Spatial and temporal data
  • directed by map viewer by topic
  • interactive and very easy to interact with
  • transparent layers, legends and data sources available to download
  • permalink allows users to share with other users they map they create



Taking Action:

  • Tools - and how the tools take action
  • Not trying to replicate, trying to point at sources and key aspects - linking to other data sources
  • Not every single tool is linked to a use-case, but that is the goal (don't really like having "orphan tools")
  • Different teams lead different topics - to add data and tools
  • The CRT is a working prototype: to see and include the tools that people are using
  • Looking for: user friendly tools with a web base (something like WARF might be "too heavy" for example)
  • Focus/Weigh the Tools: Used to build resilience. Used to take action. Look at the near term, cause and effect. Is there a tool to address specific stresses?
  • Case Studies: Must have a "Take Action" component
  • If people are not sure how to ask the questions they are looking for, CRT also connects them with experts
  • Experts - pulls up contact information of people in a geographic area (nearby from the user)
  • Looking to build local trust and provide good lines to good information, connect with a trusted source
  • Thinking about Crowdsourcing Information. CRT isn't built to do so now, but is considering that direction.
  • Anyone can link into the CRT, as the CRT isn't serving the data, which can make action applicable on a local scale



Discussion

When does scaleability become an issue? How does the CRT decide between case studies? How does it manage them? Archive them? Who are the contributors and what is teh process for determining what is useful, and also what the user may have overlooked?

Good question - has not really been determined quite yet. Still getting started. ESIP groups are trusted sources and could be really helpful in finding that knowledge that is out there? Also CRT is continuing to work with the end user (and with the end user in mind), rapid prototyping and learning by doing. CRT is interested in moving people from simple exposure to go on to action, in connecting the dots. Figuring out what people are concerned about and develop the tools that are driven by the values of the end user.

CRT is not about reinventing the wheel, it utilizes the top 10-15 tools and portals that people are using globally and is integrating them. There are references to these tools and portals as well, for more information/use. CRT has templates for use-cases (which could be useful for AgClim/ESIP), as well as the networking and the benefit of an "easy to understand story".

How are the Use Cases "nominated" and How many people are on the CRT Team?

CRT was started a year ago, initial launch in November. Small team with people dedicated to specific subject matters and topics. Case studies are nominated in conversation with the people. CRT asks to make sure these are case studies that are good to be used on the website. It's a conversation, and to see if it is really helping the end user.

Summer Meeting Session:
Continue to discuss this type of conversation/collaboration? Maybe something with other ESIP groups (like the Energy group).





Attendees: Nancy Hoebelheinrich, Lindsay Barbieri, Jim Fox, Richard Eckman, Brian Wee, Arif Albayiak, 2 Callers